Kneisel Hall Chamber Music School and Festival
]]>Mon, 18 Apr 2011 13:53 PM +0000Israel in Egypt]]>http://www.wgbh.org//articles/Handel-and-Haydns-Israel-in-Egypt-2676
]]>http://www.wgbh.org//articles/Handel-and-Haydns-Israel-in-Egypt-2676Harry Christophers and the Handel and Haydn Society Chorus and Orchestra perform George Frederic Handel's Israel in Egypt, a dramatic telling of struggle and freedom through the Exodus as reflected in text from the Bible, recorded in concert at Symphony Hall in Boston in February 2011.

You can hear the entire concert in two parts on demand here. Further down the page, you'll find a video preview from Harry Christophers, as well as video program notes in three chapters, as well as full written program notes.
Part 1 of Handel's Israel in Egypt

Part 2 of Handel's Israel in Egypt

The Handel and Haydn Society performed Israel in Egypt on February 13, 1859. By that time, the piece was firmly ensconced in the concert repertoire as being second only to Handel’s Messiah. The origins of the work in London in the 1730s, however, were less auspicious.

Composed between October 1, and November 1, 1738 and premiered in London the following year, Israel in Egypt is one of only two Handel oratorios with texts taken directly from the Bible; other texts were gleaned from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer. The librettist is not known, but scholars suggest that Charles Jennens, librettist for Messiah, the only other Handel oratorio with a Biblical text, compiled this libretto as well. Unlike his other oratorios, Israel in Egypt contains more choral movements than solo ones. This may be one reason why the work was not enthusiastically received at its premiere in London at the King’s Theater on April 4, 1739. Handel, as was his custom, made changes for subsequent performances, adding more solo movements and shortening some of the choruses.

The mood in London at this time also had an impact on the reception of this oratorio. England was ruled by King George II who was also the Elector of Hanover and therefore part of the select group who sanctioned and supported the Holy Roman Empire, which was firmly in the hands of the Austrian family, the Habsburgs. Thus, England was allied with Austria. For some English subjects in the 1730s, this association was another reminder that their king and his wife, Queen Caroline, were foreign-born monarchs. This was not an issue for supporters of King George II, but for those who felt the throne had been usurped by Hanoverians, this alliance rankled. Handel and his music became unwittingly involved in this situation because Handel was also German-born and enjoyed the favor of the royal family despite the opposition to him and his opera companies mounted by some English noblemen. Moreover, in the press Handel was associated with Sir Robert Walpole, a leading figure in the government of George II. Walpole’s unpopular policies, such as the Excise Tax, were conflated with Handel’s own business practices and transformed Handel into the public face of many attacks on the government.

Despite the political overtones imposed on his works by the press, Handel continued the oratorio performances begun in the early 1730s. With Israel in Egypt, the extra-musical message seemed to apply to all aspects of politics in England, which was facing several crises simultaneously. In 1733, the War of Polish Succession tested the alliance between England and Austria especially when England did not contribute direct military support due to Walpole’s policies. Also in the 1730s, Spanish ships boarded and searched English merchant ships. Public reaction in England called for a quick and strong response. That response did not come until 1739 when England began what was called the War of Jenkins’ Ear, named for a published picture showing the Spanish attacking an English sailor.

Internal strife also affected life in England. There was opposition not only to the Hanoverian monarchy but also to Sir Robert Walpole. The leading opponent to Walpole, Lord Bolingbroke, attempted to limit Walpole’s power at about the same time Israel in Egypt premiered. Because of this, the idea of dissent, enslavement, and the desire to be delivered from an unjust government resonated with the press and members of the audience. Reviews of the first performances openly associated England’s political troubles with Israel’s plight. The desire of some for the return of the “true” royal family, the Stuarts, was another point for domestic uncertainty; they, too, looked to this oratorio as a source of inspiration. The ability of this story to be interpreted in so many diverse and even contradictory ways is a testament to the power and appeal of Handel’s music.

The number and variety in the choral movements sets Israel in Egypt apart from Handel’s other oratorios. The chorus does not just comment on the narrative; it actively participates in telling the story. The oratorio is divided into three parts: The Lamentation of the Israelites for the Death of Joseph, The Exodus, and Moses’ Song. The music for Part 1 references earlier compositions. Parts 2 and 3 were composed in reverse order.

As a whole, Part 1 is a reworking of Handel’s Funeral Anthem for Queen Caroline. Within the opening chorus, Handel borrows from the motet “Behold how the righteous man dies” (Ecce quomodo moritur justus) by the 16th-century composer Jacob Handl (Gallus). A meditative and serene quality emerges out of the initial feeling of sadness and mourning as Handel weaves varying textures with the vocal and instrumental parts.

Part 2, The Exodus, begins with the announcement that a new king of Egypt has taken the throne and does not treat the Israelites with compassion. God then calls Moses to aid the Israelites and lead them from slavery. The depictions of the plagues and the passage through the Red Sea contain some of Handel’s most vivid writing. In “The land brought forth frogs” the short-long rhythmic pattern and leaping melodic figures portray the movement of these animals. Similarly, in “And there came all manner of flies” the running notes in the violins are as incessant as the pestilence they represent. Further on, the oboes and bassoon enter with the chorus to relate a new plague: locusts.

Handel also uses text painting to express more general feelings. The descending line in the orchestra that begins the chorus “He sent a thick darkness” and the chromatically rising and falling line in the vocal parts convey the oppressive nature of this text (“even this darkness which might be felt”). This movement contrasts with the lilting melody and pedal tones Handel employs for the pastoral setting of “But for his people.”

In “But the water overwhelmed their enemies” the orchestration again underscores the text with timpani rumbles, triplet figures in the strings, and melodic leaps in the violins, viola and oboes. Here too, Handel goes beyond the depiction of specific words to reflect the overall emotion of the scene.

In Part 3, images of crossing the Red Sea are conveyed differently in the chorus “And with the blast of thy nostrils;” steady notes in the voice and oboe confine the fast figuration in the first violins to reflect the text “the flood stood upright.”

In the final chorus, a recitative recounting the safe passage of the Israelites through the sea separates two choral exclamations of “The Lord shall reign.” A third iteration of this text begins with alternating passages for soprano and chorus. In the orchestra, trumpets and trombones contribute to the regal sound and at “for he hath triumphed gloriously” Handel creates distinct vocal lines, expanding the sound to a joyous celebration of all the people.

Scored for soloists, two choruses, and an orchestra consisting of oboes, bassoons, trumpets, trombones, timpani, strings, continuo and organ, Israel in Egypt is a monumental work. Through Handel’s unparalleled skill of story telling in music, this oratorio speaks to audiences today as powerfully as it did in Handel’s own time.

]]>Mon, 18 Apr 2011 13:11 PM +0000http://www.wgbh.org//articles/In-Performance-week-of-Apr-18-2675
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For more information about the performers and presenters featured this week on In Performance, visit

Boston Symphony Orchestra, performing Bach with conductor Masaaki Suzuki this week
]]>Tue, 05 Apr 2011 11:26 AM +0000http://www.wgbh.org//articles/The-Choir-of-Christ-Church-Cathedral-Oxford-2525
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Founded in 1526 with John Taverner as its first director, the Choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, visits 99.5 All Classical's Fraser Performance Studio with its current director, Stephen Darlington.

On the program, the choir sings

Thomas Tallis - Salvator mundi
Charles Villiers Stanford - Justorum animae
Robert Parsons - Ave Maria
William Walton - Set Me as a Seal
John Rutter - It Was a Lover and His Lass

Each Sunday in January features a pair of symphonies, one from the "standard repertoire" of 18th and 19th century German works that we return to over and over, and one from the US, mainly from the 20th century. And for this weekend, with Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday on the 15th and the official observance on the 17th, Sunday the 16th seems like the perfect chance to continue this series of symphonies and celebrate the reverend's life and legacy at the same time.

The two symphonies for the morning are Beethoven's "Eroica" Symphony and Copland's Symphony no. 3. Each is appropriate in its own way: after tearing away the work's original dedication to Napoleon, Beethoven replaced it with the words "...to the memory of a great man" (pictured above). Copland's Third Symphony, no less ambitious in its intentions, is the composer's grandest statement of his "populist" style. Let no one be cynical about this: Copland's embrace of tonality and accessibility did him no favors within the classical music establishment of the time. Like Beethoven, Copland was influenced by current political events. He took on a role as musical ambassador as a way of supporting FDR's policies both at home and abroad, and during WWII he sought out ways of writing music that would aid the war effort. He wrote "Fanfare for the Common Man" in 1942 and later incorporated it into the finale of this symphony, composed during the war's final months and premiered by - who else? - the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky conducting, in October 1946. The fanfare has not lost any of its musical or symbolic power: it was heard at the beginning of last Wednesday's memorial service in Tucson.

In the first two hours we're going to hear a lot of singing. Coretta Scott King was a music major in college, a trained classical singer, and there was a lot of music in the King household. King's last words before he was shot was a request to hear the song "Take my hand, Precious Lord" at a mass he was planning on attending that evening. We will hear that song, as well as other spirituals sung by such singers as Paul Robeson, Roland Hayes and Marian Anderson.

We will also hear some versions of the ancient French marching song "L'homme arme." Why play a war song in honor of a man of peace? Because of the way Renaissance composers like Josquin des Prez treated the theme - using this martial melody as the basis for religious works was their way of turning swords into plowshares, a frequent image in Dr. King's sermons. It also provided a subtle way for composers to make a statement about the militarism of the church. This kind of double meaning was also used in spirituals, which under the guise of worship also provided a vehicle of protest against slavery. To hear the Agnus Dei from Josquin's Missa L'homme arme, with voices hypnotically weaving this marching song and the words "Dona nobis pacem" into a tapestry of peace that sounds uncannily like it could have been written by Arvo Pärt or Philip Glass, is to realize that music has been used as a means for visualizing peace and protesting injustice for centuries.

]]>Thu, 23 Dec 2010 13:51 PM +0000http://www.wgbh.org//programs/Live-from-Fraser-276/episodes/Boston-Cameratas-American-Christmas-23062
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]]>Tue, 19 Oct 2010 17:17 PM +0000http://www.wgbh.org//programs/episode.cfm?featureid=15275
Ya-Fei Chuang performs the complete Preludes by Frederic Chopin and two Sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti.
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]]>Wed, 29 Sep 2010 11:51 AM +0000http://www.wgbh.org//articles/Memorial-Concert-for-Charles-Ansbacher-516
Hear the Boston Landmarks Orchestra's memorial concert for the late Charles Ansbacher.Wednesday, Nov. 10 at 6:30pm on 99.5 All Classical
]]>http://www.wgbh.org//articles/Memorial-Concert-for-Charles-Ansbacher-516In early September Boston lost one of its musical lights. After a courageous fight against illness, Charles Ansbacher passed away just short of his 68th birthday. His drive to bring classical music to the widest possible audience found its purest expression in the Landmarks Orchestra of Boston, which he founded in 2001. Upon his passing, the Landmarks Orchestra performed a memorial concert on Wednesday, Oct. 6, at Sanders Theatre in Cambridge, conducted by Joan Landry. The program included music by Copland, Dvorak, Bernstein, and others in performances that featured violinist Mariana Green-Hill, pianist Ya-Fei Chuang, and bass Robert Honeysucker. For full details on the program, visit the Landmarks Orchestra, and to hear the concert, tune in at 6:30pm on Wednesday, Nov. 10 for a special broadcast of In Performance with Cathy Fuller.
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